Functional Equivalence
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{{aka|Par Effectus}} | |||
As a final note on this, some possibilities don't compete with one another so much as they complement each other. When two or more possibilities are different in method or action but result in the same outcome, they can be thought of as having Functional Equivalence, or in Latin Par Effectus. | As a final note on this, some possibilities don't compete with one another so much as they complement each other. When two or more possibilities are different in method or action but result in the same outcome, they can be thought of as having Functional Equivalence, or in Latin Par Effectus. | ||
Revision as of 13:19, 22 August 2025
Also known as Par Effectus.
As a final note on this, some possibilities don't compete with one another so much as they complement each other. When two or more possibilities are different in method or action but result in the same outcome, they can be thought of as having Functional Equivalence, or in Latin Par Effectus.